Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Every kid should have grandparents

I was blessed with the best grandma. I know most people say this, but in my case it is so very true! My grandma looks like the grandmas you see in children's books. Her hair is all white and she has beautiful blue eyes and the kindest smile on her face.

Her house is on a hill, next to the forest and there is a small water stream in her backyard. She lives on a farm where she has all kinds of trees.

Growing up, I ate cherries from a cherry tree, I picked apples from an apple tree, I picked grapes straight from the vine. Plums, pears, strawberries, apricots, all these she had in her backyard. At her house I learned how to milk a cow and how to harvest corn. But most of all, in her house I learned how to be free. To this day, her house is the only place I truly feel at home. My parents house is ok, it reminds of good and bad times. The house we live in now, is good and pretty, but only my baby and my husband make it home. My grandma's house is part of my soul. It's small and old, the beds are hard and dusty. But only there I can listen to the wind and watch the sunset and feel at peace.
I spent parts of my childhood summers there, with my sister. We were allowed to everything we wanted: to clean, to make a mess, to scream, to sing. We knew every corner of the house, every drawer and every shirt our grandma had. She never once told us not to touch something. She always said: this is all yours. And because of that, we cherished everything even more. Instead of making a mess, we were cleaning, instead of screaming we were singing, instead of playing harsh, mean games, we wanted to help. Everything that is good in me today has the roots in that house and in the loving I received there.

My grandma was dealt a harsh hand in life. She was widowed when she was 50 and never remarried.  I barely remember my grandfather. He went away when I was 6. He was also a very kind soul, but he was sick most of his life. The only thing I remember about him was eating fried mushrooms together. My grandma gave birth to 9 children. She lost 3 of them before they were two years old. Her forth loss, my very dear aunt Tatiana went away at 37. That almost broke my grandma's spirit, and everybody else's in the family.

With all this, my grandma knew how to sing and dance, how to hug and kiss, how to curse and forgive 5 minutes later. She worked hard all her life. She has a big farm and she worked the land by herself well into her 70's. She had all sorts of animals she tended to (cows, sheep, pigs, chicken, geese, turkeys and what not).

My grandma is 83 now. She's weaker and in pain a lot of the days. I miss her a lot and I know she misses me and my sister a lot also. We are part of her heart, just like she is part of ours. And we are an ocean away. We talk on the phone and I pray that God will keep her so Catalina will remember her just the way I do: a strong, beautiful soul, who's not afraid to tell you the truth in your face, but who will never hurt you on purpose. A woman who took care of herself and the whole family, in a time when this was a man's job. A woman who loved beyond limits and gave herself to her children and grandchildren. I feel so blessed to have met her and to be so loved by her.

Here are 4 generations of beautiful strong women. Too bad my sister is missing, then the picture would have been perfect. Maybe I'll try photoshop :)





Friday, August 26, 2011

Night time story

Catalina found a hobby very early in life. She LOVED books before she was able to sit on her bum. She liked to touch them , she liked to listen to us reading.
She is here around  4 months old, keeping her head up to read stories about pink princesses:

Here she is, September 2010 (little shy of 6 months) enjoying her animal book:
She then went further and further, amazing pretty much everyone who saw her holding a book. We were stopped in a mall when she was a little over one year old by somebody who asked us if she truly knows what the book is about. At that time we had bought her a new book and she kept on babbling and pointing to the pictures in the book.

When she started going to day care, it was just gas over fire. More books, more people to read to her. Her progress report from daycare (at 14 months, when she graduated from infant room to small toddler room) stated that she is very good at turning all book pages, not only the hard baby ones. Yes, I was proud! Here she is one day after coming back home from day care, sometime in April 2011. These are some bills. She spent more than 10 minutes looking over the papers, talking and fighting with them, ignoring everyone in the room
Her Nana Petronela (godmother in Romanian) read stories to her also. July 4th 2011 weekend, in Lincoln Nebraska
This week we kept reading to her Punguta cu Doi Bani, a very famous Romanian kid story. She really liked one of the words "cocos" (rooster) and she kept repeating it. We realized she says lots of the story herself, so we made a short movie that made her grandmothers to go ballistic: "Catalina is a genius!"
I couldn't agree more:)
I am so in love with this little one. So darn perfect!

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Summer is ending

Fall is by far the best season in Philly. It's still warm, but all the humidity goes away. Yesterday we took a nice walk in the park. It was a little chilly so I gave Catalina my sweater. She loved it and she was so proud to wear mommy's clothes. Precious!

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Beginning

     I kept thinking if the first post should be about my beginning, maybe beginning or our relationship, or on the how Catalina, our little Papadia (dandelion translation in Romanian) came into our lives.
I decided to start where we are today, and maybe later, fill in the blanks.
    The three of us live in a nice little suburb of Philly. Our life is simple and beautiful. We wake up to go to work, we come back home to play with Catalina. Day after day the same thing, but never boring. We are overwhelmed with how much happiness she brought us. She's happy and loving, naughty and silly. She's the sun and the moon of our universe.
    I am a molecular biology researcher, Marius (the daddy) is an electrical engineer. Marius is now an amazing husband and dad. The rain has passed and sometimes the sunshine is blinding. Today we are just plain happy.
    Fall is coming and everything is just beautiful.